𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Size-scaling of zooplankton foraging in Arctic charr

✍ Scribed by P. A. Jansen; A. G. Finstad; A. Langeland


Book ID
104455593
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
218 KB
Volume
62
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-1112

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✦ Synopsis


Prey capture rate (number of prey s^−1^) and the mode of feeding of Arctic charr Salvelinus alpinus were studied by performing foraging experiments with two sizes (1·1 and 1·8 mm) of Daphnia longispina prey. Arctic charr were particulate feeders at all densities tested. Adjusted for the effect of prey density, the capture rate showed a hump‐shaped relationship with Arctic charr size for both sizes of D. longispina. Estimated attack rates (a) also tended to show a hump‐shaped relationship with fish size. The estimated size‐scaling exponent of the attack rate function, however, was relatively small, implying small changes in attack rate over fish sizes. Simultaneous estimations of a and handling time were used in combination with published data on fish metabolism and dry mass rations of prey to estimate maintenance resource density of prey as a function of Arctic charr mass. Maintenance resource densities increased monotonically with Arctic charr size, and rapidly as optimum fish size relative to attack rate on prey was passed.


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Young Arctic charr __Salvelinus alpinus__, derived from one male and one female only from Lake Ölvesvatn in northern Iceland (a stock that has been popular in Icelandic aquaculture), showed large variance in body size, primarily as a consequence of variable egg size. Shortly after the onset of exoge